In the spirit of our American holiday Labor Day, where normal people might be watching a parade, barbecuing, and shopping Labor Day deals - I’ve decided to forgo the crowds the mall and give back to the community, monetarily. (BBQ is still fair game.)

Donating is of those things that can easily be put off, and put off, and put off. Tomorrow's holiday is a perfect day to celebrate the contributions of folks who work on research and software in my communities that I use all the time.

First up is Patrick Wardle’s Objective-See Tools and Blog. I’ve been reading his research and using (and recommending) his tools for years. His Patreon site is here. Uniquely, his Patreon donators can attend his new Objective by the Sea Mac security conference in Maui for free (as if you need more excuses)! I’m really stoked to be able to attend and speak there myself!

Next is a tool that I’ve come to love and use daily, DB Browser for SQLite. Doing mainly Mac and mobile forensics (yes, I do Android too! Shh, don’t tell anyone, it’ll ruin my Apple street cred), I use this seriously every single day. I appreciate that its multi-platform and really allows me to dig into SQLite databases. The tool has really improved greatly in the last few years. They recently introduced their Patreon.

Back to blogs - I decided to throw some Dollarydoos towards my Aussie friend and insane blog aggregator Phill Moore. Phill takes the time each week read and comment on hundreds of blogs and organizes them to give DFIR folk a quick and easy way to catch up with what’s going on in the community on his thisweekin4n6.com blog. He also condenses some of this information in a monthly podcast! His Patreon for his podcast is here.

Finally, I will end on more tools – Jailbreaks! I use all sorts of jailbreaks for forensic research. In no way could I have done much of my current iOS research without the contributions of Meridian and LiberiOS jailbreaks for iOS 10 and 11. I depend on jailbreaks to provide me with full file system access, so I can dive into various databases and third-party app data that isn’t backed up with a normal iTunes backup. These can be forensic gold mines and without jailbreaks those of us in the forensic community likely wouldn’t have a chance to know or capture the data contained within them. Ben Sparks (Meridian) has a donate link on his page. Jonathan Levin (LiberiOS) advertises (upon successful jailbreak) to donating to the charity of your choice using the hashtag #LiberiOS. I chose Girls Who Code.

I encourage everyone who uses something (tool, research, whatever) and appreciates it to give something back – whether it be additional research, donations, a drink, or a simple ‘hey, this really helped me’ kind of message (you’d be surprised the warm fuzzies this can give to a frustrated researcher!). FWIW - I prefer a cool story involving my research/tools alongside a drink.